Georgia's primary solar-rights statute is O.C.G.A. 44-5-60.4 (Solar Easements). The statute authorizes voluntary solar easements between neighbors to protect access to sunlight but does NOT, by its own terms, broadly prohibit homeowners associations from restricting rooftop solar panels. HOA covenants in Georgia generally remain enforceable unless a specific provision of the recorded declaration or a separate statute limits them. Georgia is one of the minority of states without a comprehensive HOA solar-access preemption like Florida's or Texas's.
Georgia's solar legal framework is split between three areas: (1) O.C.G.A. 44-5-60.4 — the Solar Easements statute — which establishes the form, recording requirements, and enforceability of voluntary easements two neighbors can sign to keep one parcel from blocking another's solar collector; (2) general restrictive-covenant law under O.C.G.A. 44-5-60 et seq., under which HOA declarations are enforceable as written; and (3) the Georgia Property Owners' Association Act (O.C.G.A. 44-3-220 et seq.) for opt-in HOAs. Unlike Florida (Fla. Stat. 163.04), Texas (Tex. Prop. Code 202.010), and California (Cal. Civ. Code 714), Georgia does NOT have a statute that broadly invalidates HOA covenants restricting rooftop photovoltaic systems. Some HOA declarations in Georgia voluntarily allow solar with architectural-review approval; others ban or significantly restrict panel placement, color, or visibility from the street. Homeowners should: (a) read the recorded declaration and architectural-review guidelines before installation; (b) consider negotiating a solar easement under O.C.G.A. 44-5-60.4 with affected neighbors; and (c) consult an attorney if an HOA refuses approval. Cities and counties cannot override private HOA covenants by ordinance.
An HOA enforcing a covenant against an unapproved solar installation in Georgia may pursue fines, injunctive relief, and liens under the recorded declaration and O.C.G.A. 44-3-225 (POAA enforcement). Conversely, a neighbor who interferes with a properly recorded solar easement under O.C.G.A. 44-5-60.4 may be subject to damages and injunctive relief in Superior Court. There is no state administrative agency that adjudicates HOA solar disputes — they proceed as civil contract actions.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Columbus, GA
Columbus prohibits noisy construction activities in residential and commercial districts between 10 PM and 7 AM. Permitted construction hours for noisy work ...
Columbus, GA
Columbus-Muscogee County enforces decibel-based noise limits under Chapter 14, Article V of the code. Residential areas have a 65 dBA limit during the day (1...
Columbus, GA
Georgia does not require neighbor consent for fences built on your own property. Columbus property owners must ensure fences are on their property and the fi...
Columbus, GA
Columbus requires dogs to be on a leash no longer than 6 feet when off the owner's property and under the immediate physical control of a capable person. Dog...
Columbus, GA
Columbus does not impose breed-specific bans. Georgia's Responsible Dog Ownership Law uses behavior-based dangerous dog classifications that apply to any breed.
Columbus, GA
Columbus restricts wild and exotic animals within city limits. Georgia law requires permits for certain wildlife species. Venomous reptiles, large predators,...
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